Sneha Girap (Editor)

Kristina Söderbaum

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Occupation
  
Actress

Education
  
Uppsala University

Parents
  
Henrik Gustaf Soderbaum

Role
  
Film actress

Name
  
Kristina Soderbaum


Kristina Soderbaum httpsc1staticflickrcom982867837226532ea7a

Born
  
5 September 1912

Died
  
February 12, 2001, Hitzacker, Germany

Spouse
  
Veit Harlan (m. 1939–1964)

Movies
  
Jud Sus, The Golden City, The Great Sacrifice, Kolberg, Immensee

Similar People
  
Veit Harlan, Hilde Korber, Thomas Harlan, Dora Gerson, Maria Korber

Opfergang kristina s derbaum


Beata Margareta Kristina Söderbaum (5 September 1912 – 12 February 2001) was a Swedish-born German film actress, producer, and photographer. She is most known for her roles in Nazi-era films.

Contents

Kristina Söderbaum Kristina Soderbaum 1912 2001 Find A Grave Memorial

Early life

Kristina Söderbaum Kristina Soderbaum Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

Born in Stockholm, Sweden; her father, Professor Henrik Gustaf Söderbaum (1862–1933), was the permanent secretary of the Royal Swedish Academy of Sciences.

Kristina Söderbaum wwwvirtualhistorycommoviecigcard69largepvh

After both her parents had died shortly after each other, she moved to Berlin and enrolled in a theatre school.

Nazi era

Beginning in 1935, Söderbaum starred in a number of films with her husband, director Veit Harlan, whom she married in 1939. Harlan and Söderbaum made ten films together under Joseph Goebbels.

According to Antje Ascheid, Soderbaum is frequently identified as "most singularly representative of the Nazi ideal, as the quintessential Nazi star". As a beautiful Swedish blonde, Söderbaum had the baby-doll looks that epitomized the model Aryan woman. In fact, she had already played the role of the innocent Aryan in a number of feature films and was well-known to German audiences. Her youth and beauty made her a symbol of health and purity and thus an exemplary specimen of the Nazi ideal of womanhood.

Kristina Söderbaum Kristina Sderbaum

In a number of her films, she had been imperiled by the threat of "rassenschande" ("racial pollution"). Two such roles were Dorothea Sturm, the doomed heroine of the antisemitic historical melodrama Jud Süß, who commits suicide by drowning after being raped by the villain and Anna in Die goldene Stadt, a Sudeten German whose desire for the city (in defiance of blood and soil) and whose seduction by a Czech result in her drowning suicide. As a result of her watery fate in these two films, as well as a similar end in her debut in Harlan's 1938 film Jugend, she was given the mock honorary title Reichswasserleiche ("Drowned Corpse of the Reich").

Other roles included Elske in Die Reise nach Tilsit, the wholesome German wife whose husband betrays her with a Polish woman, but finally returns, repentant; Elisabeth in Immensee, who marries a rich landowner to forget her unrequited love, and in the end decides to remain faithful even after she is widowed and her lover returns; Aels in Opfergang, a woman who dies after her love affair; Luise Treskow in The Great King, a miller's daughter who encourages Frederick the Great; and Maria in Kolberg, a peasant girl who loyally supports the resistance to Napoleon and is the only survivor of her family.

Postwar

In the first few years after the war, Söderbaum was often heckled off the stage and even had rotten vegetables thrown at her. In subsequent years, she frequently expressed regret for her roles in anti-semitic films.

Kristina Söderbaum Kristina Soderbaum Alchetron The Free Social Encyclopedia

After her husband was again permitted to direct films, Söderbaum played leading roles in a number of his films. These included Blue Hour (1952), The Prisoner of the Maharaja (1953), Betrayal of Germany (1954), and I Will Carry You on My Hands (1958). Their last joint project was a 1963 theater production of August Strindberg's A Dream Play in Aachen.

After Harlan's death in 1964, Söderbaum became a noted fashion photographer. In 1974 she took a role in Hans-Jürgen Syberberg's film Karl May. In 1983 she published her memoirs under the title Nichts bleibt immer so ("Nothing Stays That Way Forever"). In her later years, Söderbaum faded into obscurity but still took roles in three movies and the television series The Bergdoktor. Her last film was with Hugh Grant in the thriller Night Train to Venice in 1994. She died in 2001 in a nursing home in Hitzacker, Lower Saxony, Germany.

Filmography

  • Uncle Bräsig (1936)
  • Jugend (1938)
  • Covered Tracks (1938)
  • The Immortal Heart (1939)
  • The Journey to Tilsit (1939)
  • Jud Süß (1940)
  • Der große König (1942)
  • Die goldene Stadt (1942)
  • Immensee (1943)
  • Opfergang (1945)
  • Kolberg (1944)
  • Immortal Beloved (1951)
  • Hanna Amon (1951)
  • Die blaue Stunde (1952)
  • Stars Over Colombo (1953)
  • The Prisoner of the Maharaja (1954)
  • Verrat an Deutschland (1954) The Betrayal of Germany)
  • Two Hearts in May (1958)
  • Ich werde Dich auf Händen tragen (1958)
  • Die blonde Frau des Maharadscha (1962)
  • Karl May (1974)
  • Let's Go Crazy (1983)
  • Das bleibt das kommt nie wieder (1992_
  • 1993: Night Train to Venice (Train to Hell)
  • 1993: Der Bergdoktor: 1. Staffel, Episode 11 "Der Sinn des Lebens" ("The Meaning of Life")
  • References

    Kristina Söderbaum Wikipedia